Multiple capture locations for 3D ultrasound-guided robotic retrieval of moving bodies from a beating heart
2012
Free moving bodies in the heart pose a serious health risk as they may be released in the arteries causing blood
flow disruption. These bodies may be the result of various medical conditions and trauma. The conventional
approach to removing these objects involves open surgery with sternotomy, the use of cardiopulmonary bypass,
and a wide resection of the heart muscle. We advocate a minimally invasive surgical approach using a flexible
robotic end effector guided by 3D transesophageal echocardiography. In a phantom study, we track a moving
body in a beating heart using a modified normalized cross-correlation method, with mean RMS errors of 2.3 mm.
We previously found the foreign body motion to be fast and abrupt, rendering infeasible a retrieval method based
on direct tracking. We proposed a strategy based on guiding a robot to the most spatially probable location of
the fragment and securing it upon its reentry to said location.
To improve efficacy in the context of a robotic retrieval system, we extend this approach by exploring multiple
candidate capture locations. Salient locations are identified based on spatial probability, dwell time, and visit
frequency; secondary locations are also examined. Aggregate results indicate that the location of highest spatial
probability (50% occupancy) is distinct from the longest-dwelled location (0.84 seconds). Such metrics are vital
in informing the design of a retrieval system and capture strategies, and they can be computed intraoperatively
to select the best capture location based on constraints such as workspace, time, and device manipulability.
Given the complex nature of fragment motion, the ability to analyze multiple capture locations is a desirable
capability in an interventional system.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
19
References
1
Citations
NaN
KQI